After the February 14 massacre in Parkland, FL, President Trump recommended bonuses for the between 10 percent and 40 percent of educators who he said could be granted concealed weapon permits. “History shows that a school shooting lasts, on average, 3 minutes," he went on during several tweets. "It takes police & first responders approximately 5 to 8 minutes to get to site of crime. Highly trained, gun adept, teachers/coaches would solve the problem instantly, before police arrive. GREAT DETERRENT!”[1]

In fact, policies similar to what President Trump recommends have already been tried and found to be counterproductive. However, the public is largely unaware of the facts, apparently because the media have a conflict of interest in honest reporting. The US can fix some of these problems with an Internet-savvy resurrection of citizen-directed subsidies like what it had with the Postal Service Act of 1792. The following summarizes the research on gun control and explains how this postal subsidy seems to have made a far bigger contribution to the growth of liberty, justice, and broadly shared prosperity in the US than the violence of the American Revolution.

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Would arming more educators reduce school shootings? Experiments like that have already been done: Different states in the US and different nations have had different laws and different numbers and types of guns at different times. The Wikipedia article on “Gun control” summarizes the state of available research as follows:

In spite of the efforts of the US Congress to block further research on this issue, a 2011 United Nations' study appeared, which concluded that firearm availability predominantly represents a risk factor rather than a protective factor for homicide.[3]

The best available research appears to contradict President Trump's recommendations.

On gun control in particular, a source seemingly independent of Wikipedia, the Harvard Injury Research Center, summarized six different studies published between 2000 and 2015. They found consistently that locations with more guns have more homicides.[5]

Conclusions:

Public policy is driven too much by money.

If public policy were driven more by facts, these kinds of terrorist acts would likely not be as frequent nor as deadly.

What about the media?

There has been substantial concern about the corrosive impact of money on US public policy. I believe that campaign finance would be a less of a problem if the media (both traditional and social) were more responsive to the needs of the electorate.

Has the research on gun control been honestly and fairly presented in the mainstream media in the US? If not, why not?

My answer: Follow the money. Media organizations everywhere sell changes in the behaviors of their audience to their funders, to the people who pay their bills. A media organization without an audience has nothing to sell. If the audience fails to change behaviors to please funders -- or, worse, changes behaviors in ways that displease funders -- the funders go elsewhere. Media organizations may bite the hands that feed them only if doing so seems likely to increase audience enough to offset the loss of revenue. Commercial media in the US get most of their money from advertising, and advertising rates are set based on audience size and the dollar value of measured changes in audience behaviors.

Do major advertisers care about gun control? At least some gun dealers advertise, and stronger gun laws reduce their market. Beyond that, many multinationals have substantial business dealings with repressive governments that could be threatened by more effective gun control in the US -- another domino theory.

Latin American Liberator, Simón Bolívar, Nov. 9, 1830, six weeks before he died: “America is ungovernable. Those who served the revolution have plowed the sea. ... This country will fall unfailingly into the hands of ... tyrants”.

“America is ungovernable... . Those who served the revolution have plowed the sea. ... This country will fall unfailingly into the hands of ... tyrants”.[7]

How did the US avoid this fate? My answer is twofold:

Almost sixty percent of adult white males could vote in the thirteen British colonies that declared independence in 1776, and the revolution didn't change that.[8]

The citizen-directed subsidies provided by the US Postal Service Act of 1792 encouraged literacy and reduced political corruption, both of which contributed to the cohesion and the broadly shared economic growth that helped make the US what it is today. While the former Spanish colonies in America splintered and shrank, the US grew.

I believe the world could benefit from a modern, Internet-savvy resurrection of the citizen-directed subsidies provided by the US Postal Service Act of 1792. That subsidy at roughly 0.2 percent of GDP became overwhelmed with the advent of advertising as the primary funding source for media beginning in the mid-nineteenth century. Between 1919 and 2007, advertising averaged roughly 2.2 percent of GDP[9] -- roughly 11 times the citizen-directed subsidies provided earlier. And most advertising is brainwash -- more image than information.

There have been several suggestions for how citizen-directed subsidies could work. Media experts McChesney and Nichols have suggested giving each citizen a voucher worth $100 per year (for 0.2 percent of GDP) that they could spend on any combination of qualified noncommercial investigative journalist organizations.[10] Yale Law professor Bruce Ackerman suggested disbursing a comparable amount on the basis of qualified mouse clicks.[11][12] Dan Hind proposed "public commissioning" of news, where "Journalists, academics and citizen researchers would post proposals for funding" investigative journalism on a particular issue with a public trust funded from taxes or license fees with the public voting for the proposals they most supported.[13]Dean Baker suggested an "Artistic Freedom Voucher" to provide citizen-directed subsidies to journalists, writers, artists and musicians, who place their work in the public domain. He claims that our current copyright system locks entirely too much information behind paywalls for far longer than required “to promote the progress of science and useful arts,” as required by the United States Constitution.[14][15]Julia Cagé has discussed “Nonprofit media organizations,” which are charitable foundations devoted to media with democratic governance split between the funders, the journalists, and their audience.[16]

If the above analysis is correct, we will not likely see a serious reduction in gun violence without improvements in media funding and governance -- without an Internet-savvy resurrection of the citizen-directed subsidies provided by the US Postal Service Act of 1792 at something close to the 2.2 percent of GDP devoted to advertising (aka brainwash).